Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200

Martinsville Speedway

Dis 17 743631 Coca Cola 250 V6gb 4pres

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Team Crew Chief Chassis Mfg. Sponsors
0 Ryan Newman Glenn Styers Randy Renfrow LFR Ohsweken Speedway; Glenn Styers Racing; Keydisplay; USNE
1 Patrick Emerling USNE Motorsports Dale Hedquist LFR USNE Power
3 Tyler Rypkema BRE Racing Greg Fournier Boehler Racing Northeast Drilling; SYP
05 Teddy Hodgdon IV Teddy Hodgdon Racing Ted Hodgdon FURY Race Cars Business Time Motorsports; The Landau Team of Re/Max; Montanari Fuel
7 Luke Baldwin Tommy Baldwin Racing LLC Tommy Baldwin PSR Products Baldwin Automotive
8 John-Michael Shenette Eighty-Two Autosport Scott Morin LFR USNE Power; Eighty-Two Services General Contractor
16 Ron Silk Haydt Yannone Racing Phil Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine; Future Homes
18 Ken Heagy Heagy Motorsports Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars Merkel Racing Engines
21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Motorsports Nick Kopcik Troyer Wanick Construction; Newtown Pools
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Cam Mcdermott FURY Race Cars ChawLew; MTT; LRD
24 Andrew Krause Supreme Racing Steven Reed LFR Supreme Mfg Co.
25 Danny Bohn Team 25 LLC Terry Hall FURY Race Cars Foxfire Farms; Ready Mix
31 Michael Christopher Jr Elite Motorsports Eugene Orlando LFR Elite Towing; Elite Racing; Baker Racing
36 David Sapienza Sapienza Racing Greg Kleila Troyer Sapienza Enterprises; Eastport Feeds
38 Jack Baldwin PSR Racing Neal Cantor PSR Products Stokes Shoes
46 Craig Lutz Goodie Racing Douglas Ogiejko FURY Race Cars Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications, Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano Catalano Motorsports Rick Kluth Troyer FX Caprara; USNE Power
55 Jeremy Gerstner GMR Enterprises Keith Wheeler Troyer Garage Doors of the Triad; Cherokee Underground; JTS Services
56 Trevor Catalano Catalano Motorsports David Catalano Troyer USNE Power
58 Eric Goodale Goodie Motorsports Rob Hyer FURY Race Cars GAF Roofing
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee Motorsports Mike Stein Troyer Bar Harbor Bank & Trust; Pee Dee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer G&G Electrical Supply, Dell Electric, Fastrack Electric, Lumiere Electrical, AP Marquadt & Sons, Andrew James Interiors, Hugh
66 Timmy Solomito Timothy Solomito Jerry Solomito Sr. LFR USNE Power; Kennedy Realty; FX Caprara
70 Andy Seuss SS Motorsports Jon Marlott LFR Rockingham Boat
71 Jimmy Zacharias Zacharias Motorsports Austin Kochenash LFR Kevo Motorsports; Stafursky Paving; American Property Solutions; Velocita
73 Paulie Hartwig III Hartwig Racing Bobby Geiger Jr Troyer Professional Therapy Associates; Velocita USA
79 Jonathan McKennedy Jonathan McKennedy Racing Patrick Walsh FURY Race Cars Stuart’s Automotive
82 Andrew Molleur DWR Racing Michael Molleur LFR Horton Avenue Materials
95 Cory Plummer Apex Racing Jonah Gosnell Apex Race Cars Tuckers Metal Fabrication & Welding; Apex Race Cars; Apex Racing; Croteau Machine & More
140 Luke Fleming Frank Fleming Motorsports Frank Fleming PSR Products William E. Smith Trucking; Taylor Auto Parts; Perkin & Associates; Hodges Realty; Autos by Nelson

 

Tyler Reddick’s dream start to the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season continued in Sunday afternoon’s 293-lap showdown at Darlington Raceway after finding Victory Lane in the Goodyear 400, which puts him in the history books alongside Bill Elliott (1992) and Dale Earnhardt (1987) as the third driver to win four of the first six races in a season.

A few setbacks along the way, such as a slow pit stop and issues with his alternator and cool suit in the opening stage, knocked the pole-winning No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota to the tail of the field for the Stage 2 restart after coming to the pits before it opened. Reddick put his “I know never to give up” attitude to the test, passing Brad Keselowski on Lap 266 to complete the epic comeback.

Other drivers found positives from the historic 1.366-mile South Carolina track, while others left the “Lady in Black” with Darlington stripes and wondered how it all went wrong. Here’s a glance at three drivers on the upswing, plus three more who hope to put a disappointing day in the rearview mirror in this Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Darlington

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Austin Cindric, No. 2 Team Penske Ford

Started: 12th

Finished: 5th

What happened: Cindric finally got his first “long overdue” top five of the 2026 season after his No. 2 team fully executed the race from start to finish. He helped put two Team Penske Fords in the top five, with teammate Ryan Blaney finishing third in the 293-lap event. Before placing fifth at Darlington, Cindric’s first five races of the year were finishes of 19th or worse.

What’s next: The No. 2 Team Penske Ford driver’s top-five day at Darlington moved him up to 21st in the Cup Series standings. Cindric hopes to keep progressing until he is in the top 16 in points, but his eight career starts at Martinsville have produced mixed results. In those eight starts, he has finished 15th or better four times, with the other four races being finishes of 23rd or worse.

Austin Cindric drives at Darlington.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

2. Daniel Suárez, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 11th

Finished: 7th

What happened: Suárez’s No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet ran strong all weekend in South Carolina. He was fourth in practice, 11th in qualifying and seventh in the race. From the time the green flag waved, Suárez rarely fell out of the top 10 during the race, earning his second top-10 finish of the season. One week after a squabble on pit road at Las Vegas Motor Speedway with former Trackhouse Racing teammate Ross Chastain, the 34-year-old Mexican driver moved on from that incident pretty quickly and locked in for a great result at Darlington.

What’s next: Martinsville is not one of Suárez’s strongest venues, scoring only two top 10s in his Cup Series career. He has also finished outside the top 20 in his last five races at the Virginia short track. However, given how the move to Spire has seemingly given him a “pep in his step,” Suárez could be in line for another strong showing.

Daniel Suárez looks on.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

3. Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota

Started: 24th

Finished: 10th

What happened: Once again, the No. 43 Legacy Motor Club driver used his past Darlington success to his advantage to move from 24th into the top 15 early in the race. However, Jones’ progress was interrupted in Stage 2 when Denny Hamlin got into his rear on Lap 111, sending the No. 43 Toyota spinning in Turn 3. The 29-year-old Byron, Michigan, native rallied to collect a top 10, his 10th career top-10 finish at the track “Too Tough to Tame.”

What’s next: With two top 10s in the last three Cup Series races, “That Jones Boy” will look to build momentum and click off more strong results for the No. 43 team. Gaining three spots and moving up to 24th in the standings, Jones will look ahead to Martinsville, hoping for a better run at the Virginia short track after finishing outside the top 30 in both races last year.

Erik Jones drives at Darlington.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 4th

Finished: 32nd

What happened: With 10 laps to go, Larson was running 11th and seemed destined for a solid result and points day at Darlington. However, the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet smacked the Turn 1 wall and suffered damage. Larson spent the final laps nursing his car home and simply trying to finish the race. Scoring points in the first two stages allowed him to salvage 19 points in all in what turned out to be a frustrating ending in South Carolina.

What’s next: If the defending Cup Series champion wants to break his 30-race winless streak, Martinsville might be the perfect destination to return to Victory Lane. Martinsville is one of Hendrick’s most successful tracks as an organization, and Larson has not finished worse than sixth in his last seven races at the “Paperclip.”

Kyle Larson enters his car at Darlington.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

2. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford

Started: 29th

Finished: 33rd

What happened: The No. 22 team’s entire weekend at Darlington was a major head scratcher. Logano was 35th in practice, 29th in qualifying and 33rd in the race, three laps down. Speed was nonexistent from the time the No. 22 Team Penske Ford rolled off the hauler, which is very uncharacteristic of the group led by crew chief Paul Wolfe. Watching teammates Ryan Blaney and Austin Cindric pick up a pair of top fives for Team Penske made Logano’s lackluster performance more shocking.

What’s next: With Darlington proving to be “Too Tough to Tame” for Logano this time around, he dropped from 11th to 16th in the Cup Series standings. Look for the No. 22 Ford driver to return to form at Martinsville, where he has an impressive streak of 13 consecutive top-10 finishes.

Joey Logano looks on.
Brittney King | NASCAR Digital Media

3. Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota

Started: 2nd

Finished: 34th

What happened: Wallace got off to a strong start with a fourth-place result in Stage 1 before a slow pit stop during the stage break cost the No. 23 Toyota driver 12 spots. The lost track position put Wallace in a treacherous spot as he was caught in an incident involving Jones and Hamlin on Lap 111. The damage was too much to overcome, with Wallace settling for his first finish of the 2026 season lower than 11th place. In reference to the slow pit stop that put him in harm’s way, Wallace told his team over the radio: “That’s what we [expletive] get.”

What’s next: The 23XI driver’s bad day at Darlington only cost him a spot in the Cup Series standings, leaving South Carolina third in points behind teammate Reddick and Team Penske’s Blaney. Before the misfortune at the “Lady in Black,” Wallace had five straight finishes of 11th or better. With Martinsville next on the schedule, the chances of rebounding seem high; Wallace has two top fives in the last four races at the Virginia short track.

Bubba Wallace looks on.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

The NASCAR Cup Series treks to Virginia for the first half-mile bout of the 2026 season with a race at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The short-track contest will be the first of two consecutive races on such tracks, with Bristol Motor Speedway following on April 12. Denny Hamlin, who already has a 2026 victory to his ledger (Las Vegas), is the defending Martinsville spring winner.

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Austin Hill will drive the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet this weekend. Hill, the defending Martinsville spring victor in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, wheeled the No. 33 Chevy to a 21st-place result on March 8 at Phoenix Raceway.

Thirty-seven cars are entered into the event.

MORE: Weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on FOX Sports

View the full entry list:

The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series travels to Virginia for the first of two races at Martinsville Speedway this season, racing at the iconic venue on Saturday (3:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Martinsville will be the first half-mile track on the docket for the circuit. Austin Hill is the defending spring winner.

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Luke Baldwin will make his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut as driver of the No. 5 Hettinger Racing Ford. Baldwin, the two-time and reigning SMART Modified Tour champion, recently ran a part-time schedule in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in 2025, tallying five starts with ThorSport Racing.

Forty cars are entered into this week’s event.

MORE: Weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on The CW

View the full entry list:

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Rising star Luke Baldwin will grab another rung on the NASCAR ladder when he makes his NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut on Saturday in the NFPA 250 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway.

The two-time and reigning SMART Modified Tour champion will drive the No. 5 Victory Custom Trailers Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Hettinger Racing.

“With all that Luke has achieved of late, a lot of people have their eyes on him. We’re proud to be the ones he chose to make his NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut,” said team owner Chris Hettinger.

“The O’Reilly Series is a big step up, but Martinsville is a flat and fast short track, and it’s the kind of place where Luke has excelled. He’s proven he can adapt quickly and run up front driving all kinds of cars. Martinsville is the right track and this is the right time for Luke to have this opportunity.”

While new to the O’Reilly Series, Baldwin is not new to Martinsville. The 19-year-old has a pair of NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts at the .526-mile oval, along with a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start. Boding well for Baldwin’s O’Reilly Series debut is that he earned his best Martinsville result in his first race there – Oct. 26, 2024, when the third-generation racer qualified second and finished seventh in the Modified Tour season finale.

There is also a family connection to Martinsville. Baldwin’s grandfather, Tommy Baldwin Sr., is a two-time Modified Tour winner at Martinsville (April 23, 1988, and Oct. 30, 1988), and Baldwin’s father, Tommy Baldwin Jr., was the crew chief for those wins. Today, Tommy Baldwin Jr., is the competition director for Rick Ware Racing’s NASCAR Cup Series team after successful stints as a Cup Series crew chief and team owner.

“Martinsville has always meant a lot to my family, so to have my own opportunity at the track is definitely special,” Baldwin said. “It’s a place where I have a decent level of comfort in terms of feel and what I need in the racecar to make a fast lap. It’s tight, it’s physical, and you have to race smart to be there at the end. I’ve been fortunate to have some good experiences there already, so the goal is to lean on that and keep learning throughout the race.”

Baldwin comes into 2026 after an impressive 2025. His back-to-back SMART Modified Tour titles made him the youngest two-time champion in series history. At the season-ending awards banquet, Baldwin was named Driver of the Year, as he also led the series in wins (four), poles (three), laps led (293), and top-five finishes (10).

At the same time, Baldwin helped deliver the 2025 zMAX CARS Tour owners’ title to Rick Ware Racing (RWR) in the Pro Late Model division. The Mooresville, North Carolina, native split driving duties with four other drivers, but Baldwin still led the way with two victories. His pole run and second-place finish in the season finale Oct. 18 at North Wilkesboro (N.C.) Speedway clinched the championship for RWR.

“I’m really proud of what we accomplished last season,” Baldwin said. “Winning back-to-back SMART Modified Tour championships takes a lot of hard work from a lot of people, and being able to help RWR win a CARS Tour owners’ title made it even more special. Opportunities like this don’t come around without results, so I’m really thankful for everyone who’s helped me get to this point.”

Baldwin made five Truck Series starts in 2025 and is set to more than double that effort in 2026 with a 12-race stint for Team Reaume that begins next weekend at Rockingham (N.C.) Speedway.

“This is a really good way to head into Rockingham,” Baldwin said. “The O’Reilly Series is a step up in competition, and Martinsville is a place that really challenges you as a driver. There’s a lot to learn in a short amount of time, and that’s how it’ll be at Rockingham, too. A solid weekend at Martinsville is the best preparation for next week’s Truck race.”

Baldwin’s O’Reilly Series debut begins Friday with a 50-minute practice starting at 4:30 p.m. EDT before qualifying at 5:35 p.m. The NFPA 250 goes green on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. EDT with live, flag-to-flag coverage provided by The CW and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

DARLINGTON, S.C. — Ryan Blaney has built some momentum in the early going of the NASCAR Cup Series season, with top-10 finishes in four of the last five races and a victory at Phoenix Raceway already in the bank. Heading into one of his best tracks and a week off after that, however, his No. 12 Team Penske group has some areas of improvement to smooth out on pit road.

“It’s something we’ve gotta work on,” Blaney said.

A resilient rally lifted Blaney to a third-place result in Sunday’s Goodyear 400, marking the best finish of his Cup Series career at rugged Darlington Raceway. He earned the last spot on the podium with a low-line move around Chase Briscoe with 12 laps remaining in the 293-lap event, but couldn’t muster enough from his No. 12 Ford to challenge race winner Tyler Reddick or runner-up Brad Keselowski.

RELATED: Goodyear 400 results | At-track photos: Darlington

“Proud of the fight back to run third,” Blaney said. “I thought our car was pretty good, just got set back too many times, and it was hard to make it back up. But yeah, proud of our effort. Made gains on it all day, so that’s good. So I was third and Austin (Cindric) was fifth, so a good showing for the Penske cars and yeah, proud of the comeback.”

Those setbacks that necessitated the series of comebacks were a source of angst from the early going. Blaney started seventh but maneuvered to third place at the end of Stage 1, but during the caution period, the 32-year-old driver radioed his crew: “I think I have a loose wheel, left rear.” The team remedied the issue by stopping for a tighten-up in teammate Cindric’s pit stall, but the extra time and ensuing penalty left Blaney 20th for the Stage 2 start.

“C’mon, guys,” Blaney told his crew on the team radio. “We’ve gotta be clean on that.”

Blaney regained some of that ground to 12th by the end of Stage 2, but another pair of issues emerged. At the Stage 2 break, Blaney rear-ended Daniel Suárez’s No. 7 Chevrolet after a traffic jam on pit entry, but the impact’s net effect was minimal. “I don’t know what the stack-up was,” Blaney said. “I nailed the 7.”

No. 12 crew chief Jonathan Hassler told Blaney that he intended to pit just once more, splitting the final stage into two runs of roughly 50 laps each. When Riley Herbst nosed into the inside wall shortly after the restart, it juggled the strategy plans. Blaney entered pit road 10th, but slightly sluggish service on the left side cost him precious time. Blaney lined up 20th for the restart after six teams stayed out on the track.

“I guess we’re good here,” the No. 12 team radio indicated, putting to rest the initial thought that a wheel wasn’t fully tight. “Far from good, man,” Blaney replied on the radio. “Far from (expletive) good.” Blaney picked off plenty of spots in the run to the checkered flag that followed, but unlike Phoenix — where the No. 12 won despite another instance of pit-trouble flare-up — he came up just short of Victory Lane.

“We had some issues on pit road that kind of set us back,” Hassler told NASCAR.com. “Honestly, I think our car got a little bit better there in the third stage, kind of once we got back in the traffic. I thought honestly, that was probably the best we’ve done all day. So we were able to kind of work forward and get back to where I thought we kind of were capable of running most of the day. I don’t think we had anything for the 45 (Reddick). He was something pretty special, but I thought we could race with about the rest of them.”

Blaney moved up one spot to second in the Cup Series standings, a whopping 95 points behind Reddick, who has assembled four wins in six races. Next on the schedule is Martinsville Speedway, where Blaney has two recent wins and a splendid 8.2 average finish in 20 career starts.

MORE: Cup Series standings | Race Rewind: Darlington

Blaney offered a solid review for Darlington’s racing under a new rules package, which blended adjustments in horsepower, aerodynamics and tires. The configuration placed an emphasis on tire management and handling, and Blaney was among those with positive feedback.

“It’s a handful,” Blaney said. “I mean, you could (expletive) the bed quickly if you were kind of rough on your stuff, which was good. So that part was good — tons of falloff. I think you saw guys kind of get too much early, and then they were done. Very rarely in my Cup career that I’ve just let guys go, whether it’s on restarts or green-flag runs and say to myself, ‘I’m gonna see you in about 20 (laps).’ And that was kind of the way it went today, so I think it was good. So yeah, looking forward to running it at more places that are a little bit bigger.”

Hassler offered his own kudos after watching the race play out from atop the pit box.

“It’s definitely a lot of work, which is fine,” Hassler said. “But yeah, a lot of changes between aero package, engine, tire being different, but that’s why we do it. We enjoy the challenge and want to come out and outwork the others. So yeah, I’m all good with it, and so if the drivers like it, and if there’s more tire wear, more falloff, more variability, I think that’s good for the sport.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway, originally scheduled for Friday, March 27, was postponed to Saturday, March 28 due to weather. Saturday night’s race is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. ET and be shown live on FloRacing.

After more than a month off, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season kicks into high gear Saturday night with the running of the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway (7 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

Saturday’s event marks the 41st visit for the Modified Tour to Martinsville and the first time the series has visited the 0.526-mile asphalt oval in the spring since 2021. Justin Bonsignore has won the last two series events at Martinsville and will try to become the first driver in series history to win three consecutive events at the track.

Mike Stefanik is the all-time Modified Tour wins leader at Martinsville with five. Other notable winners include Mike Ewanitsko, Jeff Fuller, Reggie Ruggiero, Charlie Jarzombek, Tom Baldwin, Brett Bodine, Ryan Preece and the aforementioned Bonsignore.

Tickets to Saturday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 are available here. Below is everything you need to know about the second race of the 2026 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Martinsville Speedway
Justin Bonsignore (51) and Kyle Bonsignore (22) lead the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour field at the start of the 2025 Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200. (Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway

Dis 17 743631 Coca Cola 250 V6gb 4presStatistically speaking, no one has been better at Martinsville Speedway over the last two years than Justin Bonsignore.

The four-time Modified Tour champion has led 258 of a possible 406 laps in the two most recent events at Martinsville, and he walked away with the Grandfather clock each time.

Bonsignore with the help of his Ken Massa Motorsports team will try to do something no other driver has done: Win three consecutive Modified Tour events at the track known as the paperclip. The team already has a win this year at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway, making them an obvious favorite heading into Saturday’s race.

More than 30 drivers will look to deny Bonsignore’s bid for history Saturday night, including defending Modified Tour champion Austin Beers. The Northampton, Pennsylvania driver is still looking for his first Martinsville victory and could very well be the man that denies Bonsignore his record third consecutive win at the track.

One driver who shockingly has never won at Martinsville is two-time Modified Tour champion Ron Silk. The Connecticut driver has struggled at Martinsville during his career, earning only one top-five finish in nine previous Martinsville starts. He’ll be in the field Saturday looking to add his name to the list of Martinsville winners.

A slew of other drivers could be in the running to find Victory Lane on Saturday night. Eric Goodale, who won the last time the Modified Tour raced at Martinsville in the spring, is an obvious contender aboard the family-owned No. 58. Matt Hirschman in his eighth start at the track will look to join his father Tony as a Martinsville winner.

Tyler Rypkema, who enters Saturday’s race second in points following a runner-up result at New Smyrna in the Ole Blue No. 3, is a former Martinsville pole winner who could be a contender. Patrick Emerling is another driver who is winless at Martinsville and could be a threat to take home a Grandfather clock. Ryan Newman will make his second straight start with the series Saturday, but he’ll do so in a car fielded by first-time Modified Tour car owner Glenn Styres.

Two drivers will be making their NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debuts Saturday evening. Paulie Hartwig III, who turned heads in February when he scored wins during Tour Modified and 602 Modified competition at New Smyrna, will pilot his family’s No. 73. Jack Baldwin will join the series for the first time in the PSR Products No. 38. His brother, Luke Baldwin, will also be in the field in the No. 7 for Tommy Baldwin Racing.

Other notable entrants include Andrew Molleur, who is scheduled to race the No. 82 for Danny Watts Racing for the remainder of the season, Craig Lutz, Jon McKennedy, Jimmy Blewett, Stephen Kopcik, Kyle Bonsignore, Mike Christopher Jr., Danny Bohn, Andy Seuss, Tommy and Trevor Catalano, and Timmy Solomito, among others.

The complete entry list for Saturday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 can be found here.

Martinsville Speedway
The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour has raced 40 times at Martinsville Speedway since the formation of the series in 1985. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

Race Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200
Date Saturday, March 27, 2026
Track Martinsville Speedway
Layout 0.526-mile asphalt oval
Location Martinsville, Virginia
Start time 7 p.m. ET
Laps 200
Posted Awards $138,982
Tickets Here
How to Watch FloRacing

TIRE ALLOTMENT: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is twelve (12) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by NASCAR Officials, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. A maximum of four (4) tires of the allotment may be used as change tires. The tire change rule is two (2) tires per stop. This includes “swapping” tires from front to back.

DARLINGTON, S.C. — The revival of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing has been a relatively slow process. Brad Keselowski signed on as an owner-driver in 2022 with hopes of returning the team founded by Jack Roush to its glory days, and the process has been challenged by detours, hurdles and accelerated efforts by the competition.

The team has won just once since Keselowski scored almost two years ago at Darlington Raceway.

On Sunday, on an unusually hot day and on a track that eats tires like Homer Simpson throws down donuts, RFK almost flipped its script in a very big way, showing the kind of full-race strength the team needs weekly to return to the fast lanes of the Cup Series.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Darlington

There was no win for the RFK colors (Tyler Reddick ran through, by and around the RFK Fords and, by the way, the rest of the field to breeze to the win), but the day’s results were as close to victory as is possible without taking home the big trophy. Keselowski led a race-high 142 laps (almost double Reddick’s total), won the first two stages and finished second. Chris Buescher was a better-than-it-sounds ninth, and Ryan Preece was 13th.

At one point in the second stage, the RFK Mustangs — all donning throwback tributes to Greg Biffle — were running one-two-three on the hard road that is Darlington, and somewhere Jack Roush, who had been celebrated by the team and some of its former drivers at a gathering only a few days ago, was smiling.

All three RFK drivers made point gains Sunday.

Last year, with the team still evolving, Keselowski, Buescher and Preece combined for 43 top-10 finishes. None of those ended in Victory Lane, however, so the climb continued with the dawn of a new season. Sunday was a big leap.

“We needed some speed to run with the 45 (Reddick),” Jeremy Bullins, Keselowski’s crew chief, said. “You know, if you go all the way back to last year, we had a lot of problems and had a lot of things go wrong, but we had plenty of races last year that showed what we are capable of. Today was an opportunity for everybody coming here with a new package for this place and trying to be good, and we were. A lot to be proud of today. All three cars were good.”

RELATED: Reddick, Buescher make contact in lead battle

Keselowski climbed from his car with the sweat and grime of the day marking his face but seemed quite pleased, all things considered, even after riding through another Sunday with a damaged leg, the cane he still needs waiting for him post-race.

“All in all, a great day for us,” he said. “Won two stages, led a lot of laps, scored a bunch of points. So, a lot to be proud of. The team just needs a little pace. All three of our cars are executing really well and getting good finishes. With a little bit of pace, we can win these races. We’re showing ourselves as a team that is highly capable.”

Early-race evidence indicated that Keselowski and Buescher, who led 41 laps, were strong enough to possibly race each other for the win, a moment that would have sealed RFK’s rebirth. That idea faded, but they raced together lap after lap in close quarters and danced a tightrope between wrecking each other — sometimes too close for comfort — and rolling along in a fun tandem at the front.

Preece dropped out of the front pack but said the team’s triple dose of strength early in the race showed growth across the board.

“It felt really good to drive up to the top three, and all of us were right there just working hard,” Preece said. “That’s a huge testament to Brad Keselowski, Jack Roush and RFK and all the men and women at the shop because you can’t drive slow cars fast and we don’t have slow cars.

“I think it all starts back to November, the day after Phoenix. You know, I may not look like Carl Edwards, but I promise you I am in that gym and I am working as hard as anybody. And what I noticed is Brad was in there every day, up until his leg got hurt and what happened. That determination and drive, just because what happened, you’ve got two roads that you can go down. You can play the ‘poor me’ route or you can get up on the horse and figure it out, and he did. They’re running really strong, and we’re all as a company working toward that goal of every week that we show up, you’re going to worry about us.”

For a long time Sunday they had to worry about each other, a relatively unusual circumstance. The end results left the team eager to go again. Next stop: Martinsville.

DARLINGTON, S.C. – If you’re going to show up to Darlington Raceway with the markings of a Dale Earnhardt persona, you’re going to have to be the most swashbuckling version of yourself. In Sunday’s hard-fought Goodyear 400, Carson Hocevar did his best to look and act the part.

Hocevar rallied from the rear of the field to a fourth-place finish at the historic, punishing track, matching his best result of the young NASCAR Cup Series season. He gained the last of those positions with five laps remaining, skimming past two-time Darlington winner Chase Briscoe and lap-down Austin Dillon with a dashing three-wide move, offering a chipper “that was cool” on the team radio as he cleared both into Turn 1.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Darlington

In a Friday availability, Hocevar said he hadn’t exactly embraced the Earnhardt comparisons and how they’ve been construed. But here he was Sunday, decked out in cowboy hat swagger with a retro Earnhardt-inspired design on his No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet – the brainchild of his team and sponsors who put the throwback look together.

“They put a lot of pressure on me. Honestly, I was feeling it a lot,” Hocevar said. “Yeah, it’s good to just give it a good run. The last thing I really wanted to do is kind of come in here and run in the 20s or just run mediocre. So it’s good to kind of go last to fourth and be a hard charger here.”

Charging was Hocevar’s only option after unapproved pre-race adjustments to replace an upper control arm sent him to the rear of the 37-car field in pace laps. Thanks to the dazzling pace set up front by early leaders Tyler Reddick – the eventual winner – and a rejuvenated Brad Keselowski, Hocevar went a lap down in the first stage.

After a Stage 2 spin by Erik Jones prompted a caution flag, No. 77 crew chief Luke Lambert elected to use the wave-around rule to place Hocevar back on the lead lap. The 23-year-old Michigan native was 16th by the end of the second stage, but came alive in the home stretch with a methodical march forward, adapting well to a new rules package that left drivers struggling for grip and battling tire wear.

“I enjoyed it. It seemed like everybody else was fighting it a lot more than me,” Hocevar said. “So it’s good that I could get around them and make it. If everybody stops driving good, it’s hard to take advantage of your stuff, so I think our stuff was pretty good. The sort of gap of the field allowed me to be able to pull off passes as well.”

The outcome was another development that has encouraged Spire Motorsports, which also brought Daniel Suárez home in seventh to place a pair inside the top 10. Hocevar, who also finished fourth at EchoPark Speedway earlier this season, jumped two spots to 13th in the Cup Series points after a resilient Darlington day.

“Look, I think it just kind of shows you how far he’s come,” Spire Motorsports co-owner Jeff Dickerson told NASCAR.com. “He kept it mostly together today, but great job by the 77 group on strategy to get him back on the lead lap and digging, and then we could reset the race after that second stage, and then, man, they just [expletive] took off. It was unbelievable. Fastest car on the race track at the end. I mean, it’s a shame we were like 10 seconds behind (Reddick), but again, I think the right side is clean, I think he’s earned some respect again out there. It’s kind of metaphorical. You can tell we’re pretty happy. We’ve got two in the top 10, and obviously, best Chevy.

“I think I’m just more happy with how they just kind of stayed in it. I mean, it’s not lost on me that it’s always been a challenge for us to put 500 miles together any weekend when we’ve qualified well, let alone have to come through the back. And so I’m just really proud of our entire group with two in the top 10, and we keep getting some separation in points. I mean, points matter now just as much as they do in August, but you know, when Carson gets locked in, man, we’re going to be really, really good.”